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They are losing even more money than they do on average when they play Q6o (since their opponents might have trash, but might have decent hands, too).
In theory, if the stacks were very deep, and your opponents were bad enough, you could play garbage and hope to get paid off enough by your terrible opponents when you hit. The problem is that the the stacks are shallow which limits the amount you can win, and trash doesn't hit very often, which limits the frequency of your payoffs. Disconnected offsuit hands flop two pair or better (not counting a pair on the board) about 3.5% of the time, and they are not guaranteed to win when they do.
A much closer decision is whether to fold trash in the small blind, where you get a 50% discount. It's still usually right to fold even with that discount.
Now assuming all are bad players with lets say regularly 7 limpers as the OP has said, surely if you were one of the said limpers then you would hit as much as all the others therefore long term all would even out. But if you concentrated on playing the SB mainly then the odds long term must fall in your favour.
Does it make sense what I am trying to say?
I am assuming of course that all players are of a similar standard so won’t go into how good your post flop play is.
Well, I was assuming that you do have a skill advantage. With very deep stacks, that might be enough to get your completion back, but I don't think it is with the typical short effective stacks.
First, when you are considering playing a garbage hand, you know that your hand is bad, but you don't know that the limpers have bad hands, too. Most of them probably do, but they usually don't raise with decent or good hands. So, you are starting out with a hand that is worse than theirs, on average.
Second, you are out of position, which is extremely important in NL.
I think these are worth more than the 50% discount.